Snek
Also known as: Danger Noodle · Nope Rope · Boop Noodle
Snek is an internet meme built around images of snakes captioned with cutesy, misspelled interior monologues. Emerging from intentional misspellings in the early 2010s, the format took off in late 2015 on Facebook and Reddit, borrowing the baby-talk grammar of Doge and LOLcats while giving snakes a distinctly adorable, faux-tough personality. The meme doubled as stealth PR for pet snakes, rebranding them from creepy reptiles into lovable "danger noodles."
TL;DR
Snek memes feature photographs of snakes overlaid with captions written in a childlike, deliberately misspelled dialect.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The snek format is loose, but follows some common patterns:
Find a snake photo. The funnier the snake looks, the better. Hognose snakes, tiny snakes in hats, and snakes with "angry" expressions are popular choices.
Write the snake's inner monologue. Use snek dialect: swap "snake" for "snek," drop prepositions, misspell deliberately. Replace swear words with "heck" or "heckin."
Scatter captions around the image rather than using a single text block (closer to the Doge format than the LOLcat format).
Give the snake a personality. The classic snek tone is a tiny creature trying to sound intimidating. Phrases like "am danger," "heck off," "doing a frighten," and "no step on snek" fit the format.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The "doing a [verb]" construction that defines snek grammar also appears in the dog meme "Stop it son, you are doing me a frighten," showing how animal meme dialects cross-pollinate.
Snek vocabulary predates the meme format itself. Snake owners on Tumblr were calling their pets "sneks" and "danger noodles" before the captioned image macro format existed.
Urban Dictionary defines sneks with characteristic on-brand language: "Boopnoodles, Dangernoodles, whatever you call them. They are cuddly".
The earliest YouTube appearance of "snek" as a misspelling dates to 2009, a full six years before the meme format took shape.
Derivatives & Variations
"No Step on Snek"
— A parody of the Gadsden flag ("Don't Tread on Me") featuring a crudely drawn snake and childlike lettering. The image was turned into flags, patches, and doormats[1].
Tiny Snek Comics
— A webcomic by artist Alex Cohen launched in 2016, featuring a cute tiny snake speaking in snek dialect[1].
r/sneks subreddit
— A Reddit community for snek-style content and pet snake photos, with posts and comments written in meme dialect[1].
"Doing a frighten" / "Doing a heck"
— Phrasal templates from snek that crossed over into general DoggoLingo and dog meme culture[2].
Social Justice Snake
— A niche counter-meme blog noted by The Daily Dot as one of the rare non-positive uses of snek imagery[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
- 1
- 2
- 3Snek - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 4DoggoLingoencyclopedia
- 5Snek - Urban Dictionarydictionary